THE MERITS OF THE APPLICATION
27 In substance, the draft order nisi alleges that the RRT:
· failed to consider claims made or evidence given by the applicant, namely that he had at various times fled in fear of his life, and had been arrested and beaten by police and members of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party ("the BJP") in India, and that he would suffer persecution by reason of his political opinion at the hands of the Indian police and members of the BJP;
· misconceived the applicant's evidence, and wrongly concluded that he was persecuted in order to obtain his property, and not by reason of his political opinion; and
· failed to comply with s 430(1) of the Act.
28 The draft order nisi is supported by two affidavits filed on behalf of the applicant.
29 In an affidavit sworn on 6 August 2001, the applicant claimed to have a well-founded fear of persecution if forced to return to India. He claimed that the RRT had failed to consider a number of relevant matters submitted in support of his application, including his arrest and poisoning by members of the BJP. He also claimed that the RRT had misunderstood his evidence.
30 In an affidavit sworn by the applicant's former solicitor on the same date, it was said, on the basis of instructions and documents shown to him, that he believed that the RRT had failed to consider various claims made by the applicant. Importantly, these included a claim that he had been "arrested and beaten by the Police at the behest of the members of the ruling BJP party in India". The affidavit also claimed that the RRT had misconceived the applicant's testimony, wrongly concluding that he was saying that he had been persecuted in order to obtain his property, and not by reason of his political opinion.
31 As can be seen from both the applicant's affidavit, and that of his former solicitor, his case was that the RRT had failed to address an important claim that he had made regarding having been "arrested and beaten by the Police". It is clear from the RRT's reasons for decision that it did not address any such claim. The initial question is whether any such claim was, in fact, made.
32 It was in part, at least, because the allegation was supported by an affidavit sworn by the applicant's former solicitor that I adjourned the hearing on 14 October 2003 in order that a transcript of the proceeding before the RRT could be obtained. It was only by doing so that I could ascertain whether the applicant's contention that the RRT had failed to deal with this claim was true.
33 However, before dealing with that issue, it may be useful to summarise, in some detail, what the RRT actually determined.
34 The RRT referred to the information contained in the applicant's initial application, together with the claims that he made during the hearing. It noted that the applicant said that after serving seven years as an active member of the governing BJP party, he quit that party in 1997, and joined a rival group, the Samajwadi Party ("the SWP").
35 The RRT noted that the applicant claimed that because of his most recent political affiliations with the SWP, he had been persecuted by his relatives, all of whom were said to be active members of the BJP, and other BJP party workers. The relatives and other BJP members had seized his property, which comprised a shop with a steel business, a block of land, a residence and a significant fixed bank deposit.
36 The RRT further noted that the applicant stated that he still held the original title deeds to the shop and block of land, was the signatory to the bank account, and that his father-in-law owned the residence. It then referred to his testimony regarding his unsuccessful attempts to seek sanctuary in other parts of India. The applicant claimed that wherever he had gone, his persecutors had tracked him down. On one occasion, he had been poisoned, and required hospitalisation. He claimed that he would continue to support the SWP. He said that he feared for his own life, and that of his family, if he were required to return to India.
37 The RRT noted that, in his original application, the applicant had not claimed to fear persecution by reason of his political opinions. It then set out the reasons that he proffered for having failed to make any such claims. The RRT said:
"…he told the Tribunal he did not disclose the political aspects of his case before the hearing because he was concerned that the information might be passed on to his country. He said he was under pressure and mentally disturbed and did not realise he should disclose the political link to the threats he had fielded."
38 The RRT next summarised the contents of two letters provided by the applicant. It said:
"One is signed 'your enemy', but otherwise anonymous. It states that the author will kill him and take his property and, if he wants to save his life he must give all of his properties…It reiterates that the author will kill the Applicant and his family and take his property and adds that the writer will shoot him wherever he lands in India.
The other is signed 'your friend' and tells the Applicant that his brother is very angry and looking for him. It states that people went to find him in Delhi and Chandighar and want him to come back."
39 Under the heading "Discussion and Findings" the RRT concluded:
"The Tribunal accepts that the Applicant had been involved in a dispute with some relatives over property that he owns. It is unclear whether it is his cousins or his brothers, as his story changed.
The Tribunal does not accept, however, that the people with whom he is in dispute are motivated by the Applicant's political opinions to harm him. His claims that there was any political link at all were not made until the hearing, and the Tribunal is satisfied that that aspect of his evidence was a recent invention.
In arriving at that conclusion, it notes that neither of the letters provided by the Applicant suggest any political motivation in the Applicant's pursuers. There is lack of genuineness surrounding the letters, signed as they are by 'your friend' and 'your enemy' and each paraphrasing the Applicant's claims regarding property and his escape to Delhi and Chandighar. Even if the letters are genuine, they do not disclose any Convention motivation to harm the Applicant on the part of his alleged persecutors. Each of those personal pieces of information he provided indicate only that the pursuers are motivated to grab the Applicant's property. The absence of referral to any other motivation does not exclude the possibility that such motivation exists, but in this case the Tribunal cannot be satisfied that there is a Convention motivation.
In considering the Applicant's evidence in the context of the Refugee's Convention and Protocol, the Tribunal is satisfied that his fears are not for reason of his race, nationality, religion, membership of a particular social group or political opinion. The Tribunal has considered whether or not there may be an appropriate particular social group but concludes, ultimately, that the Applicant's fears arise from a loss of property that is a consequence of a dispute with family members.
…
…[T]he Tribunal does not accept that there is any link between the Applicant's fears of harm and his political opinions. His fears arise from a family dispute over property. In any event, it is apparent that any threats that have been made have been relatively idle, as they [sic] Applicant has not lost any property as yet, his family has not been harmed and, if he is to be believed, he recovered from an attack relatively quickly and was able to leave the country without his influential brothers and/or cousins intercepting him.
At the very worst, it seems that he could avoid all further danger by handing over the property that has been demanded. Whilst losing some property would be very unpleasant, the Tribunal is satisfied that such a fate does not amount to persecution, particularly in the Applicant's case where his in-laws have property which the Applicant has previously used, where his wife and children remains and, in the Tribunal's view, to which the Applicant can return. …
…
If the Applicant wishes to escape such actions, it would be reasonable that he relocate to another area of India where he is not known. He speaks English and Hindi, has experience living and working away from home and is well-educated. He could, for example, relocate to Delhi or another city where he could seek accommodation and employment without being harassed."
40 It was submitted on behalf of the respondent that none of the grounds set out in the draft order nisi was even arguable. The RRT had not misconceived the applicant's evidence, nor had it failed to consider any of his claims. It rejected his claim that his mistreatment was related to his political opinion, or to his membership of a particular social group. That was a finding of fact, based largely upon the RRT's assessment of the applicant's credibility. A finding of that kind was not open to review by this Court. Once that finding was made, it was unnecessary for the RRT to address independently the matters raised by the applicant in his draft order nisi.
41 It was further submitted on behalf of the respondent that the RRT had not failed to comply with s 430(1). That subsection did not impose any obligation upon it to make findings on "material" questions of fact, but merely to set out the findings that it had actually made: Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323. This the RRT had done.
42 Finally, it was submitted that the RRT's decision was independently supported by its finding that the applicant could avoid any real chance of future harm by relocating within India: NANI v Minister for Immigration & Multicultural & Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCA 1082 per Jacobson J at [54]-[59]. Any error on its part in dealing with other aspects of the applicant's claims would not have affected its decision, and would not, therefore, amount to "jurisdictional error". Alternatively, relief should be refused in the exercise of the Court's discretion.
43 When this matter was first before me, I was entirely satisfied that the submissions on behalf of the respondent regarding these matters were correct, and that the application should be dismissed. What troubled me was the applicant's assertion that a significant claim that he had advanced before the RRT had not been addressed by it in its reasons for decision. My concern was heightened by the support lent to that assertion by the applicant's former solicitor in his affidavit filed in support of the draft order nisi. It was for that reason that I adjourned the application so that a copy of the transcript of the RRT hearing could be obtained.
44 The transcript reveals that the applicant's assertion that he claimed before the RRT that he had been "arrested and beaten by the Police" at the behest of the BJP is entirely without foundation. It is true that he referred to the police as being unwilling or unable to provide him with protection. However, that was a matter that was considered by the RRT. He made no claim whatsoever of having been mistreated by the police, in any direct sense, either in his initial application in support of his claim to be a refugee, or during the course of the RRT hearing.
45 In answer to the question "Why did you leave that country [India]?", the applicant wrote in his initial application:
"Reason for leaving my country is family quarrel. My cousins have taken over my property which I got from my grand parents. I am alone and they are four brothers. They have licensed guns. They forcibly took my property showing duplicate papers.
They bribed the police. They have influence of the M.P.s. They have even tried to give me poison to kill me.
I was admitted in the hospital and was treated for one month. They have even tried to hit me on the head of which I am having the medical report. If I complain to police they have threatened to kill me. My place is already disturbed place where no one cares for law and order. That's why I am seeking refuge for some time."
46 Further on, in answer to the question "Do you think the authorities of that country can and will protect you if you go back? If not why not?", the applicant wrote:
"My cousins are of bad society and character. They have cases running against them in the court. The can do anything to get the property, they can get me killed by the hired criminals."
47 Plainly the applicant was not, at that stage, alleging that the police had arrested, or beaten him. Rather, he was complaining that he could not count upon them to protect him from his those who would seek to have him killed.
48 Turning to the hearing before the RRT, although the word "police" is mentioned twice in the transcript, those references do not go beyond the claims made by the applicant in his initial application. For example:
"MR VRACHNAS: So what problems did you have because you helped this person [Mr Solanki of the SWP] win a seat [Kanpur] in the federal parliament.
INTERPRETER: My family - most of them - I have brothers also in my family. They are BJP party members and they are not happy that I was campaigning for Samajwadi party and they were saying that I should join BJP, not Samajwadi party, and they were keeping some sort of (indistinct) about me, that why I'm doing work for Samajwadi party.
…
He says they didn't like it - the Samajwadi party candidate won an election in the area. My brother - and BJP party workers, they said they should grab my property forcibly and BJP workers assured my brothers that nothing will happen to them from the police. They will protect them during that act. So that's how it happened, they grabbed my property forcibly."
49 The word "police" is mentioned again as follows:
"MR VRACHNAS: Who wanted to kill you?
INTERPRETER: My cousin brothers.
MR VRACHNAS: So is it a group of people you think wants to kill you?
INTERPRETER: BJP Party workers and BJP and Bajrang Dal Party. My brothers are also in that party and they are having protection from the police and the party also, so that's why they wanted to kill me."
50 It is clear from the documents provided to the RRT, and from the transcript of the hearing before it, that the applicant's contention that his claim that he had been "arrested and beaten by the Police" had been ignored cannot be sustained. Put simply, he made no such claim.
51 It follows from what I have said that the applicant has advanced no arguable grounds of review. That is reason enough to refuse the application to enlarge time.
52 It also follows that the application should be dismissed. The applicant must pay the Minister's costs.
I certify that the preceding fifty-two (52) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Weinberg.